Los Angeles Police Commission Votes to Require Cops to Try De-Escalation Before Firing Guns

The Los Angeles Police Commission voted on a policy Tuesday that would require all LAPD officers to try to defuse situations whenever possible before firing their guns, with the specific aim of decreasing the number of officer-involved shootings. Suggested Reading ‘Sinners’ Releases in Black American Sign Language. Here’s What That Means A Burger King Employee…

The Los Angeles Police Commission voted on a policy Tuesday that would require all LAPD officers to try to defuse situations whenever possible before firing their guns, with the specific aim of decreasing the number of officer-involved shootings.

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From the Los Angeles Times:

The new rules formally incorporate a decades-old concept called โ€œde-escalationโ€ into the Los Angeles Police Departmentโ€™s policy outlining how and when officers can use deadly force. As a result, officers can now be judged specifically on whether they did all they could to reduce tensions before resorting to their firearms.

Tuesdayโ€™s unanimous vote caps a 13-month effort by the Police Commission to revise the policy. Two sentences will be added to the departmentโ€™s manual, the first of which tells officers they must try to de-escalate a situationโ€”โ€œwhenever it is safe and reasonable to do soโ€โ€”by taking more time to let it unfold, moving away from the person and trying to talk to him or her, and calling in other resources.

The Times reports that the American Civil Liberties Union expressed concern in a letter sent to the commission before Tuesdayโ€™s meeting that the revision did not explicitly say that de-escalation would be considered in determining whether an officerโ€™s use of force was reasonable, and without that language, it urged the commission to โ€œrefuse to accept the proposed revisions as complete.โ€

The commissionโ€™s inspector general, Alex Bustamante, said at Tuesdayโ€™s meeting that the revisions do allow the panel to consider an officerโ€™s de-escalation efforts because commissioners can consider whether an officerโ€™s actions before a shooting contributed to the shooting.

Bustamante said that new training and directives from the LAPD reinforce the importance of de-escalation and the policy change.

According to the Times, this is the latest in a series of changes the police commission has made to try to reduce the number of shootings by officers; the civilian board has also been pushing for two years to get LAPD brass to provide more training to officers that emphasizes avoiding deadly force whenever possible.

Last year the police commission ruled that eight shootings by LAPD officers were unjustified, and according to a Times review of nearly 440 shootings since 2007, that is the highest number in at least a decade.

On Tuesday the LAPD released a 400-plus-page report detailing how and when officers used force in 2016.

LAPD officers had 40 shootings last year, down from 48 in 2015, according to the report, and blacks are still shot at a disproportionately higher rate than others, making up a third of all those shot by police last year while representing just 9 percent of the cityโ€™s population.

The LAPD is also at the top of a list of big-city law-enforcement agencies cited in a report as having the highest number of deadly shootings by officers.

The LAPD can be proud of at least one thing:

Police in Chicago fired their guns more than those of the LAPD and had a total of 46 shootings in 2016.

Small victories.

Read more at the Los Angeles Times.

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